Depression & Suicide Prevention
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Transcript Depression & Suicide Prevention
Dr Kirthi Kumar
Psychiatrist
•Mercy
Mental Health Program
•Wyndham Private Clinic
•South West Specialist Centre
•Harvester Private Consulting
1
Significance
Overview
of depression
Depression in men
Management
Extent of suicide
Risk factors
Management
Prevention
2
Misconceptions
Under
recognised
Medical profession have a duty to
identify depression
One of the leading causes of disability
worldwide
Prevalence rates – anxiety (9.7%),
affective disorders (5.8%), D & A (7.7%)
3
Most
episodes are managed by GPs
85% of antidepressant prescriptions are
by GPs
4th most commonly managed problem in
general practice (McManus MJA 2000)
2nd highest contributor of global disease
by 2020 (Harvard University Press 1996)
4
Major
depression
Bipolar depression
Dysthymia
Adjustment disorder
PTSD
Substance use disorders
Personality disorders
Organic depression
Post psychotic depression
5
Features
Depression
Unhappiness
Anhedonia
++
▬
Loss of interest
++
+/-
Depressive cognition
++
▬
Loss of reactivity
++
▬
↓ Libido
++
▬
↓ Productivity
++
+/-
↓ Biological functions
++
▬
Psychotic Symptoms
++
▬
6
43 y o, male working as an admin officer presents sadness,
amotivation to work, apprehension, frustration, helplessness,
impaired sleep of 3months duration in the context of apparent
work place harassment and bullying by management for the last
5months. Gives a history office adapting new technology about
5months ago which he could not cope as he was computer
illiterate due to dyslexia. He has not been able to cope with
performance review. Manager has told given him 2months time to
‘pull up his socks’ Patient has been feeling the threat of job loss.
He has no past, family history. No major adverse personal or
childhood events.
On mental status examination, comes across as with depressed
mood, non reactive affect with reduced range, preoccupied with
state of affairs, apprehensive. Expresses helplessness. Not suicidal.
No psychotic or cognitive features. He is insightful.
Diagnosis: Adjustment disorder with depressive and anxiety
symptoms
7
45 y o single mother of two kids. Separated 8 years ago. Works
part time in a supermarket.
Presents with a 4 year history of sadness of mood, reduced
motivation, does not enjoy much, fatigue, minimal
socialisation, eats well, lack of sound sleep. No death wishes
or suicidality. No psychotic symptoms. Has been on
antidepressants for 3 years. Has not improved much nor has
deteriorated. Functionally, drops kids off to school and
attends work till 3 pm. Cooks for kids and self. Cleans the
house once a week. Drives adequately. No drug and alcohol
history.
MSE, stated age; well attired, talks slowly. No PMA ↓, depressed
mood but laughs at times. No psychotic or cognitive
pathology. Insightful
Diagnosis: Dysthymia
8
30 y o mother of 1 (2 y o), married house wife. Reports 3 months of
low mood, reduced interest, lack of pleasure, fatigue, increased
effort, minimal appetite, loss of weight (5 kgs), poor quality of
sleep, frequent disagreement with husband. Has been neglecting
household chores, has occasionally thought of suicide but no plans
or intent. Past history of PND, sister and mother have depression
on treatment. Unable to identify overt reasons but wonders if her
husband is not caring and son is demanding.
MSE: looks tired, walks slowly, low tone of speech, worthless,
fleeting suicidal thoughts, depressed mood, passively smiles at
times, fearful of what people think around her. No psychotic or
cognitive pathology. Some social judgement impairment.
Insightful.
Diagnosis: Major depression
Recurrent depressive disorder
9
Medications
alone
Psychotherapy alone
Combined medications and
psychotherapy
ECT
10
Average
episode ► 9 months
Most episodes remit in 2 years
No prophylaxis ► 50% have another
episode
RDD with >3 episodes ► 70-80% will
have another episode within 3 years
Increasing number of episode ► ↑ risk of
suicide, chronicity and disability
11
Severe
symptoms
Depression and physical comorbidity
Depression and personality challenges
Non response to treatment
Suicidality
Psychotic depression
Bipolar depression
Inability to treat
Patient requests
Legislative requirement.
12
Good
at hiding
Higher rate of under recognition
Higher rate of physical symptoms →
fatigue, pain, loss of weight
Irritability
Higher preexisting D & A issues,
antisocial behaviour
Better coping strategies such physical
activities, instruments
13
Variable
attitude towards suicide
Way to end the suffering
Suicidal thoughts = underlying pathology
Planned or impulsive
‘Chronic suicide’
14
2nd
leading cause of death < 30 y o after
MVA.
Highest in Eastern European countries
(0.027%)
Lowest in Latin American and Muslim
countries (0.0065%)
Australia ranked 13th (WHO 1996)
♂ = 23.7/100,000
♀ = 3.7/100,000
15
Rates per 100,000
10%
9%
8%
7%
6%
5%
4%
3%
2%
1%
0%
completed
suicide attempts
suicide (0.02%)
(2.5%)
DSH (6%)
suicidal ideation
(9%)
16
120
100
80
60
40
20
0
17
Past
suicide/DSH attempts
Psychiatric diagnosis
Substance abuse
Family history – suicide/self harm
Male
Younger group (16-25)
Older age > 75
Victim of child abuse
Victim of violence as adult
18
Major
physical illness
Social isolation
Multiple psychiatric conditions
Significant anniversary
19
Current
intent or plan (self harm/suicide)
Hopelessness
Active symptoms
Expressing distress
Lack of impulse control
Low frustration tolerance
Active D & A use
Recent stress
20
Recent
psychiatric admission
Recent loss of relationship (separation,
divorce, death)
Retirement
Access to method
Poor adherence to treatment
Lack of treatment response
Insomnia
Hostility
Concerned family/carers
21
Sex: ♂ complete more than ♀
(about 4:1)
Age: Highest for 15-24 y o, > 60 y o
Depression
Past
Attempt
Ethanol & Drug abuse
Rational thinking is
impaired
Support networks
(limited)
Organised plan
No
Spouse
Sickness
Experiences of
adversity
Sexual abuse
Co morbidity
Anxiety disorder
Personality
disorders
Event: stressful
22
Higher
the social state, higher the risk (??)
Physicians, especially ♂
Among physicians psychiatrists,
ophthalmologists, Anesthetists
Musicians, dentists, law enforcements officers,
lawyers & Insurance agents
Unemployment
23
Positive
self esteem
Adequate problem solving
Spirituality
Supports
Children
Adequate self control
Pregnancy
Sense of responsibility (towards
family/pets)
24
No
risk factors = absent
Static + protection = low
Static = some risk - moderate
Static + dynamic = moderate to high
25
Must
be offered to every patient
A routine practice
Share the knowledge, improve the
knowledge
2nd opinion when in doubt
Combined approach – clinician + patient
+ carer
26
Routine
clinical care
Crisis management plan in place
Triage contact details provided
Ascertain patient’s ability to understand
crisis plan; involve others if needed
27
Treat
(initiate/optimise) mental disorder
Alert triage if necessary
Refer to mental health follow up
Check if someone can stay with patient
Crisis management plan discussed
Review again within a week
28
As
per management of moderate risk
+
Contact triage for further input
Admission if needed
Involve the carers
Notify other clinicians
(psychologist/nurse/social worker)
+
29
General public
- helps to identify risk
- encourages help seeking
- reduces stigma
General practitioners
- most suicidal patients contact GP within a
month prior to death
- if unrecognised, untreated the
risk worsens
- opportunity to make a difference
Gate keepers (eg, PCA, school cousellors, priests)
- increase awareness
- gate keepers are 1st point of contact to many
- lesser level of stigma; more attached to gate
keepers
30
Screen
for mental illness, D & A use, suicidal
behaviour
Include youth, juvenile offenders, high
school students
Use screening instruments
Treat underlying conditions
- a health care plan
- medications
- psychotherapy (CBT, DBT, problem
solving, IPT)
- family therapy
- post suicide attempt follow up
31
Multimodal
approach
Must be repetitive to be effective
Must be part of orientation in health care
Must include information on
- improving help seeking behaviour
- access to care
- reducing stigma
32